Fort Good Hope company has a plan for made-in-the-N.W.T. homes. It just took its first step
CBC
In Fort Good Hope, N.W.T., work is underway on a modular home construction centre that local leaders say will help the community meet housing and employment goals.
The Home Construction Centre is being built by Ne'Rahten Developments Ltd, the business arm of Yamoga Land Corporation, in partnership with Fort Good Hope's K'asho Got'ı̨nę Housing Society and Yellowknife-based Taylor Architecture Group.
Arthur Tobac, the business manager for Ne'Rahten Developments, told CBC the end goal is for the centre to become a space where community members can work full-time to create affordable modular homes for residents of Fort Good Hope and other Sahtu communities.
"If it's made in the North, the money stays here in the North. All that we are doing, the money will stay in the community. The economy will grow, and I think that that's what our vision is," he said.
Ne'Rahten Developments obtained about $6 million in funding from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation for the project this past summer.
Since then, Tobac said the community has already chosen a spot for the new facility, and a subcontractor has cleared the area and laid gravel.
Tobac said the plan is to bring in as many of the supplies needed as possible over the winter road this year and begin construction as soon as the spring building season starts— though Tobac worries that the extremely high volume of trucks expected on the winter road could present some challenges.
Kristel Derkowski, the research manager at Taylor Architecture Group, was involved in the design of the building.
She said the current plan is for a two-storey building, about 6,800 square feet in size. Half of the space will be a two-storey building space with a door large enough that a semi-truck can back into it.
The remaining area will contain a ground-floor wood shop, a staff room and kitchenette, some office space and a second-floor classroom area overlooking the main work space where pre-trades instruction could take place. "We're trying really, really hard to deliver something that's going to be meaningful and that's going to be sustainable and have an impact," Derkowski said.
Tobac said the training aspect of the project is the most exciting part of the project for him. It's a continuation of work the community has been doing for years to build up capacity in the trades through Ne'Rahten and the K'asho Got'ı̨nę Housing Society.
Right now, Tobac said community members who want to pursue the trades generally go to Fort Smith for school, after which they might need to spend a lot more time outside the community to accumulate the building hours they need to complete their certifications.
"It's just really hard for them," he said, especially for those who have young families.
He said if community members are able to get those building hours at the new home construction centre, as is the plan, it will remove a substantial barrier for them.
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